Sunday, August 06, 2006

Prisoner-swap hopes rise for teen in Cambodia

Kenneth Nguyen
The Age (Australia)
August 7, 2006


SCHAPELLE Corby is not the only prisoner inching closer to home. An Australian schoolboy sentenced to 13 years in a Cambodian jail at the age of 16 is a step closer to a return, after the Cambodian Government notified Canberra of its willingness for a prisoner-exchange treaty.

Sydney teenager Gordon Vuong, now 17, is housed in a squalid cell in Phnom Penh's Prey Sar prison, having been convicted for attempting to smuggle 2.1 kilograms of heroin to Australia in January last year.

Family and friends of the Christian Brothers, Lewisham, student claim he was coerced into the drug run by two men — a 47-year-old Cambodian man and a 25-year-old Cambodian-born Australian — who were arrested along with him.

A spokesman for Justice Minister Chris Ellison confirmed receipt of the notification from the Cambodian Government.

"Such a treaty will apply to all Australians imprisoned in Cambodia, including those who were sentenced before the treaty came into effect," he told The Age.

Finalisation of the treaty and Vuong's return to Australia could still be years away.

In the meantime, campaigners for him hope that an appeal for a reduced sentence could be successful. The Foreign Affairs Department is pushing for a hearing date.

Relations between Cambodia and Australia were complicated this year after the Howard Government refused to extradite an Australian schoolteacher convicted of pedophilia in Cambodia.

No comments: